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Toiling Point

Press Relations

How green printing can make a good impression

By Joel Makower
03 Jan 2006
Read more about: business
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Man and paper.
Can't go paperless? Go green.
Photo: iStockphoto.
Look around your workplace, and you'll likely find plenty of printed material, from business cards to brochures to books. Printing words and images on paper may seem like one of the more environmentally benign things your company does, but that isn't necessarily the case. If you examine the life cycle of printed matter -- from turning trees into paper through the witch's brew of chemicals involved -- professional printing takes on a decidedly non-green hue.

The explosion of web and digital technology doesn't seem to have changed things -- as one pundit put it, the paperless office has turned out to be about as practical as the paperless bathroom. But if you still have to print, go green.

Green printing is on a roll, moving beyond small, do-good companies and activist groups to larger corporations and government agencies that have mandates to purchase greener goods and services. As demand for green printing has grown, so too has the number of printers offering such services -- or, at least, claiming to.

It's about time. The mechanics of most types of printing haven't changed much over the past half-century. Lithography and gravure -- the methods typically used to print books, magazines, and catalogs -- employ plates, which are used to apply ink to paper. Typically, the process involves a variety of inks, solvents, acids, resins, lacquers, dyes, driers, extenders, modifiers, varnishes, shellacs, and other solutions. Only a few of these ingredients end up directly on the printed page. The balance are used to produce films, printing plates, gravure cylinders, or proofs, or to clean printing plates or presses.

Many of the ingredients are toxic: silver, lead, chromium, cadmium, toluene, chloroform, methylene chloride, barium-based pigments, and acrylic copolymers. And that's not all. Chlorine bleaching of paper is linked to cancer-causing water pollutants. Waste inks and solvents are usually considered hazardous. Bindings, adhesives, foils, and plastic bags used in printing or packaging printed material can render paper unrecyclable.

And you thought it was just ink on paper.

I Ink, Therefore I Am


Not everyone defines "green printing" the same way, and there is no standard or certification for what makes a printer -- or a given project -- green. For example, some printers use conventional techniques for most customers, breaking out the recycled paper and soy-based inks only when a customer asks. But others go all-out as a matter of course.

Printing.
Sheet happens.
Photo: iStockphoto.
Among those in the latter category is GreenerPrinter, based in Berkeley, Calif., whose customers include Clif Bar & Co., Hewlett Packard, and the San Francisco Giants. The company uses high post-consumer recycled content, non-chlorine-bleached papers from New Leaf, one of the leading environmental paper companies. GreenerPrinter customers can receive an "environmental benefits statement" detailing the water, energy, and emissions saved for a given print job. And the climate impact of shipping finished jobs is offset through investments in renewable energy. (Full disclosure: GreenBiz.com, the nonprofit website I founded, has an affiliate relationship with GreenerPrinter.)

Then there's Quad/Graphics, one of the nation's largest printers, with more than 12,000 employees. For more than 30 years, Quad, based in Sussex, Wis., has been a pioneer in green-printing practices, from reducing ink and paper waste to making sure print-shop air quality far surpasses legal guidelines. The company recycles more than 98 percent of its waste and has won numerous awards for environmental leadership, though it doesn't market itself as a "green" printer.

It's not hard to suss out who's green and who's not, says Priscilla Martin, print buyer for Clif Bar. "When speaking with a new potential vendor, their views or positions on environmental considerations are generally apparent within the first few minutes," she says. "If I'm not hearing a green message, rather than asking about it, I tell them what is important to us and see how they respond."

And what about price? Green printing can cost a little more -- but it doesn't have to. "The major trade-off we thought we'd experience was a price increase," says Andrea Stupka, marketing and promotions manager at Homegrown Naturals, Inc., purveyor of Annie's Homegrown products. "But after doing a cost comparison between four printers, one of them green, we were pleasantly surprised. The slight cost increase to go green was so insignificant it was worth it."

In fact, a green printer worth its salt will help you find ways to make projects more economical. "We spend a lot of time educating customers to show them that green printing isn't just more environmentally responsible, it's often better quality and more affordable," says Josh Maddox, sales manager at GreenerPrinter. "By taking the time to show them the least wasteful way to design and produce [projects], we often save clients money over conventional printing costs. We win a lot of business that way."

Image Consciousness


So how do you make your printing greener? Since there's no official standard, you're on your own to determine who's really committed. In general, an environmentally minded printer should: use the most eco-friendly papers available; reduce or eliminate toxic chemicals, waste ink, and solvents; be willing to use soy or other vegetable inks without any price premium; educate customers about how to reduce a project's environmental impact; and provide safe working conditions for employees, including using the most advanced air-filtration systems.

Here are three questions to ask when scoping out your particular job:

1. Can the job be printed on paper containing a high percentage of post-consumer recycled fiber?

The answer will help determine whether the printer has practical knowledge about the characteristics and advantages of different types of recycled paper. Don't just accept "sure, we can use recycled" as an answer. Specify paper with at least 50 percent post-consumer content.

2. Can it be printed with low-polluting inks?

In most jobs, soy- or vegetable-based inks work just fine (90 percent of daily newspapers use them routinely for color printing). Avoid inks containing heavy metals like lead, cadmium, and mercury, which are commonly used to produce some bright colors. Printers should be willing to swear off heavy-metal inks and suggest alternatives.

3. What is being done to improve the recyclability of the print job?

Coatings, laminates, inks, foils, adhesives, labels, and paper selection can all affect the recyclability of a printed document. A printer should be able to find alternative ways to get the desired effect -- through innovative paper sizes and newer glues that won't inhibit recycling, for example.

As with so many things green, the more you know, the better decisions you can make. In the end, the best option may be not to print at all. "It is always good to question, 'How important is this item to print?'" says Bryan Mazzarello, art director at Organic Bouquet. "Many times companies can offer the same information online and update it cheaper and faster. Maybe a postcard invitation to the website would be more effective than a brochure that will end up in the trash."

As Mazzarello makes clear, green printing isn't your only option. The greenest document of all is the one you never commit to paper.

Press Here

Good resources for green printing include: GreenBiz Green Printing Resource Center, the Bay Area Green Business Program's Top 10 Green Printing Practices, Dynamic Graphics' Printing Green: 12 Things You Need to Know, and Environmental Considerations for the Print Buyer from the Minnesota Environmental Initiative.
Read more about: business
Tools: print | email | discuss | write to the editor | subscribe | RSS

What's your toiling point? Don't check your values at the door. Send workplace questions, challenges, ideas, and pet peeves to
 Joel Makower Joel Makower, a writer and consultant on corporate sustainability practices, is the founder of Green Business Network, which produces Greenbiz.com, Climatebiz.com, and other sites. He is the author or co-author of more than a dozen books, and lectures regularly to companies, industry groups, and business schools throughout the world.
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Lighter on substance than on the earth

While this article is undoubtedly well intentioned, "Press Relations" offers little in the way of practical assistance for environmentally inclined designers. Both Grist and Makower usually offer more than generalized eco-platitudes, but there have been several more in-depth discussions of these topics in the past year -- mine included.

For those inclined, I've offered more detailed comments in my blog as well.


add one more P

I don't understand why we don't put one more P in MM (marketing mix) principles of green business right away, so just before someone is allowed to start any kind of business, he/ she must be pushed to focus on issue of printing next to product, price, place and promotion (4 P's). I am living in Vancouver, and writing my paper about this and about the green printer companies who claim to run green business. And I agree Kcopas, zero practical assistance when it comes to reality. I am still looking for the gp company which is focusing on helping in order to change the purchasing habits of print buyers by educating them about the ecological impact of buying traditional printing products.

Printing Going Green

I have recently heard about how non-eco-friendly printing is adversely affecting the world we live in. And ever since I have decided to use only environment friendly printing in my work area. Bacchus Press has helped me immensely to achieve this and for everyone interested in green printing, I would like to recommend them. Let's join hands for a better tomorrow and make a greener healthier world!

We are listening...

Although green printing is a good start for any business, I think we all know it is not enough. I work for Alternative Graphics based out of Eugene, OR. Not only do we offer fully sustainable, eco-friendly, full service printing with New Leaf recycled paper and vegetable inks; we are a fully sustainable, eco-friendly company.
Like I had mentioned, we understand green printing makes a difference but is not enough. We offer an in depth course for businesses to learn how to become fully green by William H. Klausmeier, Ph.D. Right now this course is only offered in OR but we are looking to branch out.  

Food for thought: An average small office of 15 people uses more than 5 tons of paper a year. By using 1 ton of eco-responsible paper, this is the difference your company can make:

SAVES-
15 fully grown trees
3,164 gallons of water
7 million btu of energy
695 pounds of solid waste
1,170 of greenhouse gasses

Feel free to contact me if there is anything I can do for you.
priya@alternativegraphics.com


~Priya Chaison Alternative Graphics, "The Eco-Friendly Printer"

Facts from "Green Myths" from USPS - ?

Rec'd an email from the Premier Printing Co in Houston with info taken from a USPS publication:
Facts from "Green Myths" Publication: "Deliver Dare to Dream," May 2008, The United States Postal Service.

Has anyone seen this?

I'm concerned about the big push for FSC, which is better than clearcutting native forests by a long shot, but not nearly the best solution for making paper.

I've been told in all earnestness by paper industry reps that they have to mix virgin fiber with recycled to make the paper stronger (longer fibers). They're supposed to be the experts, but I've printed many jobs with GreenerPrinter on different 100% PC papers that have come out beautifully, so I know from experience that this notion about virgin fiber isn't accurate. As a graphic designer, I've also discovered that vegetable inks are more transparent (naturally) than inks with higher petroleum content. Color is more nuanced and saturated. Vivid.

I've talked to my local printers for two decades now about offering recycled paper, but always had to special order at a premium of 30%. They are now, finally, offering FSC and using inks with less petroleum content. I'm thrilled, really, but GreenerPrinter is so far ahead that they get most of my business despite their distance (250 miles; they buy carbon credits to offset delivery).

I'm happy to see paper suppliers moving beyond the 30% recycled paper they've been offering for years as their solution to the problems of heavy resource damage, pollution, and the enormous waste of paper that could be recycled. Yes, they are directly responsible. Who better to make recycled paper than those who make paper? We've been talking about recycled paper for 40 years. They've had time to re-tool and refine their supply chain.

There have been genuine efforts towards real solutions, but excuses like fiber length that are demonstrably false I don't want to hear.

It's good to see printers moving to FSC-sourced raw materials as their new 'solution'. It's a move in the right direction, along with using low- to no-VOC vegetable inks.  But the printing industry is huge and hugely polluting. I'd love to see, for example, their lobbyists working to reverse the ridiculous federal ban on growing hemp. It was a patriotic duty during WWII, as it should be today. (Hemp is not psychoactive and has a longer and stronger fiber than wood, which is why it's used in archival papers. It's expensive because the ban means American paper companies have to import it. Hemp is also a better crop plant than trees.) What about other material options, like kenaf as a raw material, or recycled denim and cotton?

What I really want to see is some real innovation, such as that being done by Alternative Graphics, Bacchus, and GreenerPrinter in Berkeley. They prove it can be done.


I'd go for that!

With my business printing company, I'd go for green and that's the professional way.

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